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Publication Metadata only Copyright law practice in Turkey(Istanbul University Press, 2020) N/A; N/A; Nevhis, Deren Yıldırım; Faculty Member; Law School; 176366Zusammenfassung Das Gesetz fuer geistige Schoepfungen und Kunstwerke trat im Jahre 1951 in Kraft. Es bestimmt den Schutzgegenstand des Urheberrechts und stellt verschiedene Kategorien,wie wissenschaftliche und literarische Werke,musikalische Werke, Kunstwerke und Filmwerke auf. Seit der Gesetzesaenderung im Jahre 1995 werden auch verwandte Schutzrechte des ausuebenden Kuenstlers,des Herstellers von Tontraegern und des Sendeunternehmens anerkannt Der Schutz der Verwertungsrechte und der urheberlichen Persoenlichkeitsrechte bildet Den Kernpunkt dieses Rechtsbereiches. Der einstweilige Rechtschutz spielt im Urheberrecht eine kritische Rolle. Die Einfuehrung der Berufungsinstanz ist aus diesem Grund zu begruessen, da die Gerichtspraxis in Vergangenheit zur Abweisung der Antraege tendierte. / Abstract The Turkish Copyright Act is from 1951. This Act distinguishes between several classes of works such as linguistic works, musical works, works of arts and cinematographic works. Under the amendment in 1995 the same. Act is regulating the related rights: The protection of the rights of exploitation and moral rights is a sensitive subject for legal practice. Furthermore, the protection of copyrights is related with preliminary injunctions. The provisional legal protection of copyrights can be safeguarded by the new built. Courts of appeal in Turkey. / Öz (Türk) Fikir ve Sanat Eserleri Kanunu 1951 tarihlidir. Söz konusu kanun birçok eser kategorisine yer vermektedir; bunlar sırasıyla edebiyat eserleri, müzik eserleri, güzel sanat eserleri ve sinema eserleridir. 1995 değişikliği ile aynı kanun eser ile bağlantılı hakları da koruma altına almıştır. Uygulamada eser üzerindeki mali haklar ile manevi yetkilerin hukuki korunmas hassas bir konudur. Bunun yanı sıra telif haklarının korunması ihtiyati tedbirler ile de bağlantılıdır. Fikri hakların geçici korunması yeni kurulan istinaf mahkemeleri ile de garanti altına alınmıştır.Publication Metadata only Difficult choices: choosing the candidate of the nation alliance in the 2023 Turkish presidential election(Routledge, 2024) Department of Media and Visual Arts;Department of International Relations; Baruh, Lemi; Çarkoğlu, Ali; College of Social Sciences and Humanities; College of Administrative Sciences and EconomicsThe Turkish presidential election in 2023 marked a pivotal moment for the ruling Justice and Development Party and Erdogan, grappling with criticism over their handling of the economic crisis. Six parties formed the Nation Alliance to challenge the incumbent, but negotiations for the alliance's presidential candidate collapsed, leading to the breakdown of the alliance. This study analyzes the divided opposition and its difficulty in nominating a likeable candidate as another reason for the continuation of President Erdogan's rule. A Response Surface Analysis (RSA) approach is utilized to describe the potential outcomes of the options that opposition parties considered regarding their presidential candidate. The analysis shows that the leader of the Republican People's Party, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, was weaker in appealing to the centre-right wing voters of the alliance partner, the Good Party, yet fared better in gathering the support of the Kurdish voter base of the Peoples' Democratic Party.Publication Metadata only Down and up the “U” – A synthetic cohort (panel) analysis of female labor force participation in Turkey, 1988–2013(Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd, 2021) Kırdar, Murat G.; Dayıoğlu, Meltem; Department of Economics; Tunalı, Fehmi İnsan; Faculty Member; Department of Economics; College of Administrative Sciences and Economics; 105635We study the aggregate labor force participation behavior of women over a 25-year period in Turkey using a synthetic panel approach. In our decomposition of age, year, and cohort effects, we use three APC models that have received close scrutiny of the demography community. The exercise is repeated by rural/urban status and by education to tease out some key differences in behavior. Our comparative methodology yields remarkably consistent profiles for most subsamples, but not all. Notably all methods reveal an M-shaped age profile attributable to child-bearing related interruptions in rural areas and for low-educated women in urban areas. We also find that younger cohorts among the least-educated women are more likely to participate, contrary to the belief that culture stands in the way. The evidence we compiled confirms that Turkey has reached the turning point of the U-shaped pattern in female labor force participation observed in countries where agriculture initially accounts for a large fraction of employment. We dwell on methodological issues throughout the paper and seek explanations for the occasional fragility of the methods. We establish that evolution of the linear trend present in the cross-section age profiles is responsible for the differences in the findings. Despite the apparent inconsistency, the models we use are consistent in recovering the turning points of the age, period, and cohort profiles.Publication Metadata only Economic voting during the AKP era in Turkey(Oxford University Press, 2020) Department of International Relations; Aytaç, Selim Erdem; Faculty Member; Department of International Relations; College of Administrative Sciences and Economics; 224278N/APublication Metadata only Epilogue(Berghahn Books, 2020) Papastefanaki, Leda; Department of History; Kabadayı, Mustafa Erdem; Faculty Member; Department of History; College of Social Sciences and Humanities; 33267N/APublication Metadata only Ethno-religious division of labour in urban economie s of the Ottoman Empire in the nineteenth century(Berghahn Books, 2020) Güvenç, Murat; Department of History; Kabadayı, Mustafa Erdem; Faculty Member; Department of History; College of Social Sciences and Humanities; 33267N/APublication Metadata only High-quality versus low-quality growth in Turkey: sauses and consequences(World Scientific Publishing Co., 2020) Acemoğlu, Daron; N/A; Üçer, Murat; Faculty Member; Graduate School of Business; N/AN/APublication Metadata only History matters for the export decision: plant-level evidence from Turkish manufacturing industry(Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd, 2009) Özler, Şule; Taymaz, Erol; Department of Economics; Yılmaz, Kamil; Faculty Member; Department of Economics; College of Administrative Sciences and Economics; 6111We analyze the export decision of Turkish manufacturing plants from 1990 to 2001. In addition to the presence of high Sunk costs of entry in export market,,, we find support for the hypothesis that the full history of exporting matters for the current export decision. However, the effect of the past export experience on current export decision depreciates rapidly with time: recent export market participation matters more than the participation further in the past. Finally, while persistence in exporting helps lower the costs of re-entry today, there are diminishing returns to export experience. The results are robust to several plant characteristics (plant size, technology, composition of the employment), and the spillovers from the presence of exporters in the same industry.Publication Metadata only Introduction and historiographical essay: Greek and Turkish economic and social history, and labour history(Berghahn Books, 2020) Papastefanaki, Leda; Department of History; Kabadayı, Mustafa Erdem; Faculty Member; Department of History; College of Social Sciences and Humanities; 33267N/APublication Metadata only Moving beyond the walls: the oral history of the Ottoman fortress villages of Seddülbahir and Kumkale(Temple University Press, 2008) Cenker, Işıl Cerem; Department of Archeology and History of Art; Şenocak, Lucienne; Faculty Member; Department of Archeology and History of Art; College of Social Sciences and Humanities; 100679The ruins of the 17th century Ottoman fortresses of Seddülbahir and Kumkale, situated at the Aegean entrance to the Dardanelles, pose a challenge to the official historiographic tradition of the modern Republic of Turkey. The collapsing walls of the two fortresses are concrete reminders to Turkish citizens, who make regular pilgrimages to this region, and to those who live in the adjacent villages, that its history includes more than the famed victories of Turkish troops over the Allied forces during the Gallipoli campaign of World War One. The fortresses were also built with the patronage of a woman, Hadice Turhan Sultan, the mother of the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed IV, to protect the Ottoman Empire’s western frontier from the Venetian navy. Modern Turkish historiography rarely mentions the role of women in the Ottoman past; and when women do appear, they are often described as scheming and opportunist members of the harem whose intrigues contributed to the eventual “decline” of the empire. Hadice Turhan Sultan’s role in developing Seddülbahir and Kumkale thus confounds traditional Turkish historiography. Based on an oral history project I conducted at Seddülbahir and Kumkale, 1999--2002, my presentation will explore how post World War One migrant residents of the villages adjacent to these Ottoman fortresses incorporated their physical reality into a unique historical narrative, one that conflates the Ottoman past of this region with its nationalist and gendered historiography. My presentation will also examine how oral history reveals the disjunctures and complex processes of negotiation that emerge when a strong nationalist historiography confronts residents of an unstable and war-torn region. I will conclude by examining how political changes in Turkey since 2002 and the more religious and conservative agenda of the present day government are shaping a new narrative for the Gallipoli peninsula, its Ottoman and Republican pasts.